Thursday, January 15, 2015

Calling
freedom of expression a “fundamental” human right, the pope outlined why
he believes there are limits to that right. If someone “says a curse word
against my mother, he can expect a punch,” he joked, according to an Associated
Press translation. “It’s normal. It’s normal. You cannot provoke. You
cannot insult the faith of others. You cannot make fun of the faith of others.”

I am certainly less knowledgeable about theological
questions than the pope, but still, I recall that Jesus Christ once said:

…whosoever
shall smite thee on thy right cheek, turn to him the other also.

Perhaps, Jesus really meant to say that if someone insults
your mother then all bets are off.

One hopes that the pope was not comparing the Prophet
Mohammed to his mother. And one suspects that a "punch" is not the equivalent to gunning down the staff of a newspaper or murdering shoppers in a kosher super market.

To be fair and balanced, I offer some remarks Peggy Noonan made yesterday about the proliferation of “blasphemous” images of the Prophet
Mohammed.

Her view is clearly consonant with my own, so it is well
worth quoting:

This is
the moment, a week after the shootings, on the day of the publication of the
first issue of the magazine since the murders, to rob all the Muhammad cartoons
of their mystique. Steal away their power. Make them banal, not secret,
censored and powerful but common. Flood the zone, let everyone see them. Show
that they are only cartoons, caricatures, playthings. Show that the murderers
got exactly the opposite of what they wanted. “You kill to stop a cartoon? We
flood the streets with cartoons. You can’t take it? We have freedom here. You
don’t have to live in the midst of it, you can go to a place that does not put
such an emphasis on this kind of freedom.”

If in
the West you keep such things as the cartoons in a magic, censored vault you
give them mystical power and luster. These stupid drawings should not be imbued
with these qualities! The argument is for disseminating them.

13 comments:

Anonymous
said...

I like John Derbyshire quote.

"I've said it before and I'll say it again: The mass immigration of Muslims into non-Muslim nations was the worst idea of the 20th century, after communism. A terrible, terrible idea. Also completely unnecessary. As I've also said before, a Muslim who seeks to leave his homeland can go to any of more than fifty Muslim nations. There's no reason he needs to go to the West, to live grinding his teeth among infidels"

I thought the Pope's words were a little surprising. Perhaps he's saying it takes two to make a fight, and if you want a fight, you can probably get your wish.

But the secondary level of that is we have a responsibility to master our reptilian brain's impulses, so when someone wants to provoke us, we recognize we have a choice in our response, so we have to first be able to master our anger and rage.

I remember the Japanese samurai story:http://unknowingmind.blogspot.com/2006/07/story-of-wise-samurai.html---------A samurai warrior once was charged with avenging a noble's death at the hands of a rival warlord. He trained for four years, studied the warlord's habits, and planned his attack. When the day came, he stealthily approached the warlord when he was alone, and cornered him. The samurai held his katana aloft, poised to strike the final blow, when the warlord, utterly defeated, spit in the face of the samurai. The samurai sheathed his sword and walked away, rather than kill the warlord out of anger.---------

It's a preposterous story, but because it is so counter to human nature, like Jesus's stories, it says we have a choice in how we behave.

But lastly, the question of mass murder, its hard to know what is being suggested by the Pope. Myself, it suggests I hold a responsibility for harm, and words hurt, and if someone is willing to die to show their hurt, they're probably also willing to act outside the law, and I'd better consider how much I'm really willing to die rather than repress my point of view.

Peggy Noonan's prescription seems rather light. yes, the problem is that 1.6 billion Muslims haven't all yet decided to hate the West, so if we try hard enough to make them unwelcome they'll decide its hopeless to try to kill ALL those pesky bullies and move back to their own lands?

The truth is that so long as Muslims are a minority, they scream about minority rights. As soon as they are in the majority, minority rights cease to exist. Muslims are antithetical to the West and there is no reconciliation possible between them and us. Theirs is a religious conviction; ours are political.

As for the Pope, this one should go back where he came from. It isn't much of a role model country and neither is he as to his Prog politics. Remember he's a Jebbie most of whom are progs. Almost all the hierarchy is like that, just like academia.

One of the reasons I have liked the philosophy of most martial arts is that it provides a commonsense guide to action. One of the first and most important steps is avoidance. Here one has to recognize that in order for some remark or insult to be of value one has to respect the opinion of the offending person/s. No respect no action required.In a small minority of cases the next step would be to stop the offender by a reasoned well thought out argumentation to the offense. This usually works well in most cases. Or at the very least one can agree to disagree.When this does not work one may have to hurt the offender. Usually works quite well.In the vary small minority of cases one may have to maim. Very few offenders get to this point.Anyone who gets past this point is one that may have to be eliminated. Not a thing most rational individuals want to doNOTE: Killing another human being is only necessary when there is no other choice. In this case the "religion of peace' requires a jump from step one to death. It is a very poor religion that cannot abide challenges from those outside the religion. For the Pope to intimate otherwise is an admission of insecurity in one's religious thought.Yes we should all try to respect others, but they need to demonstrate a capacity for that respect themselves. Nonviolence only works when one has a large population of people who are predisposed to non violence and/or one has those with the "swords" to protect and defend that non violence.The "pen is only mightier that the sword" when it is backed up by the sword. The Quakers survived because others were desirous of protecting them and a desire to hope that one day humanity might attain such lofty goals.